presumptive
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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*upó |
From Late Middle English presumptif, presumptijf (“based on presumption”),[1] from Anglo-Norman presumptif and Middle French presumptif, présomptif (“based on presumption; of an heir or heiress: presumed to be entitled to inherit unless someone with a superior entitlement is born; presumptuous”) (modern French présomptif), and directly from their etymon Late Latin praesumptivus (“based on presumption; bold; insolent”), from Latin praesūmptus (“presumed”) + -īvus (suffix forming adjectives). Praesūmptus is the perfect passive participle of praesūmō (“to presume”),[2] from prae- (prefix meaning ‘before; in front’) + sūmō (“to seize, take; to accept, presuppose; to undertake”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₁em- (“to distribute; to take”)).
Audio (Southern England): | (file) |
presumptive (comparative more presumptive, superlative most presumptive)
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